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Wine for Normal People

Ep 190: The Birthplace of wine - The Republic of Georgia

Wine for Normal People

Wine for Normal People

Alcohol, Lifestyle, Arts, Education, Food, Wine, Dining, Grapes

4.61.5K Ratings

🗓️ 27 May 2017

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Where did vitis vinifera originate? Where do we think winemaking started? We think it's from the area that is now the Republic of Georgia. Once part of the USSR, this small, beautiful nation is reemerging as a wine power so it's time for an overview!

Here are the show notes:

Top level stuff...

  • Georgia is where Eastern Europe meets Asia. Between the Caucasus Mountains and the Black Sea
  • As big as Scotland or Ireland
  • 111,000 acres of vines ranging from the coast of the Black Sea to Kakheti, on the other side of the Caucasus mountains
  • Outside Tbilisi, they only speak Georgian so when you go, you've gotta hire a guide

Location:

  • Russia to the north and Turkey and Armenia to the south
  • Primary wine region of Kakheti—according to Georgians, the birthplace of wine itself
  • The main wine regions, from Kakheti in the east and Imereti, Racha and Samegrelo in the west, are within a few hours’ drive from Tbilisi, the capital

Climate:

  • a diverse climatic landscape that varies from temperate to subtropical

An Historical Relic: Qveri (Kwhere-vree)

  • Traditional Georgian fermentation: a clay vessel used for centuries to produce wine in Georgia.
  • Qvervi: 1,000-liter beeswax-coated terra-cotta jar buried in the earth
    • A qvevri is a thick-walled vessel buried deep in the ground in a marani, or Georgian wine cellar.
    • naturally maintains wine at optimal temperature during fermentation and allows it to age for many years without spoilage.
    • Once fermentation is complete, the wine can be racked into another qvevri, leaving the heavy sediment behind.
    • Qvevri white wine is sharp, strong, amber. or in the case of reds, so dark it’s known as shavi gvino: black wine

Grapes: 500+ indigenous grape varietals found in Georgia,

  • Red: Saperavi, Tavkveri and Chkhaveri plus Tavkveri, Shavkapito, Chkhaveri and Ojaleshi.
  • White: Rkatsiteli (r-kat-see-telly), Chinuri and Mtsvane (mits-vane)
  • méthode Champenoise in Georgia since the late 1800s, with native grape
  • Orange wine: Friuli winemaker Josko Gravner makes his sought-after “orange” wines using ancient Georgian techniques/qvervri

History:

  • Grapes and traces of wine residue have been found in archaelogical digs from 8,000 years ago.
  • Vitis vinifera originated from the Caucasus mountains in GA
  • Ottoman rule in west, Christianity in the east made east side of the country the wine powerhouse
  • Georgia came under Soviet control a few decades later. Small vineyards merged into huge co-ops =CRAP
  • Georgia declared independence in 1991
    • Russia's 2006 embargo on Georgian wine imports, lifted only in June 2013. Forced diversification into other, stronger markets

The wines of Georgia have a little ways to go, but they are a fascinating slice of vinous history and worth seeking out or trying if they are ever right in front of you!

Transcript

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0:00.0

Thanks for

0:08.0

downloading Wine for Normal People Radio,

0:10.0

the podcast for people who like wine but not the snobbery that goes with it.

0:14.0

I'm Elizabeth Schneider, a certified Silmaier and certified specialist of wine.

0:20.0

And I'm MC Ice, just a wine-loving normal person.

0:23.0

We just had a funny, affair conversation that we thought we would share.

0:27.0

It's a good lead in to the podcast topic, right?

0:30.0

It really is. It was about how, so today was our last day of school. It ends absurdly early here and our kindergartner who's I guess I'm sorry in July basically it's our rising I guess

0:45.7

our rising first grader now I can't believe it we went to like an end of

0:49.8

your party with a bunch of neighborhood kids and our kids said something about having

0:56.8

wine and then her friend, she's a little bit older, said, you drink wine and she said, yeah yeah if I have a sip and then the girl turned to her mom and said mom

1:07.4

Can I have wine and the mom is like?

1:10.4

No and she laughed and then she looked at me like she didn't want to offend me and I said no it's fine

1:15.6

It's just that in our house

1:16.7

She didn't give you the evil eye? Not at all

1:19.1

She understood she understood I said you know everybody's allowed to accept the dog.

1:24.0

Obviously dogs are allergic to grapes in many cases.

1:27.0

Only has had wine before.

1:29.0

She's only have a little lick and I would never risk it. Okay I don't even want to talk about that.

1:34.8

But so we let our kids if they want to have a sip of wine or dip their finger and they're

1:39.2

allowed to have it when they get a little bit older they'll have some.

1:42.0

So I've talked about this on the podcast before. I've talked

...

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